|
First report of Thielaviopsis populi on
hybrid poplar in Hungary
I. Szabó1* and T.C. Harrington2
1 University of West Hungary, Institute of Forest
and Wood Protection, P.O. Box. 132.,H-9401 Sopron, Hungary
2 Department of Plant Pathology, Iowa State University, Ames,
Iowa, 50011, USA
*szaboi@emk.nyme.hu
Accepted for publication 04/11/03
In summer 2002, an unusual root disease was observed in Hungary in
two stands of 3 to 4 year old Populus x euramericana. The
symptoms began with bark necrosis at the collar, which was frequently
swollen, cracked and wounded by the xylophagous insects Aegeria
apiformis Clerck and Anaerea carcharias Linnaeus (Fig. 1).
Later, necrosis of the inner bark extended underground throughout most
of the root system, before the attacked trees died.

Figure 1: Early symptoms at the collar of a young poplar
From infected trees, Fusarium solani (Mart.) Sacc. and Cylindrocarpon
destructans (Zins.) Sholten fide Booth were frequently
isolated. In addition, Thielaviopsis populi (Veldeman ex Kiffer
et Delon) Paulin, Harrington et McNew (º Chalara populi Veldeman
ex Kiffer et Delon) was less frequently isolated from necrotic bark and
wood taken from the root collar. The isolate of T. populi was
identified based on cultural characteristics on potato dextrose agar
(PDA), the endoconidia (Fig. 2) and aleurioconidia (Fig. 3). The ITS
sequence of the nuclear rDNA (GenBank accession AY423551) was identical
to that of two other isolates (CBS 484.71 and 486.71) of T. populi
from diseased poplar in Belgium (Veldeman 1971). Perithecia of a Ceratocystis
species with hat-shaped ascospores were observed on symptomatic wood
after 7-10 days incubation in a moist chamber, but the formation of the
sexual state could not be reproduced in culture, even in pairings with
the CBS cultures. Previously T. populi was thought to be asexual
(Paulin-Mahady et al., 2002). A pathogenicity test was conducted
under laboratory conditions by inoculating wounds of 2 year old sprouts
of P. x euramericana with mycelium. Lesions averaging 25 x
13 mm were produced in the inner bark after 5 weeks (compared to 45-cm
lesions produced by Fusarium in similar inoculations). Control
inoculations resulted in no necrotic lesions.
|

Figure 2: Conidiophores and endoconidia
|

Figure 3: Aleurioconidia
|
Thielaviopsis populi was first described in Belgium, where it
caused bark lesions in stems of P. x euramericana cultivars robusta
and gelrica (Veldeman, 1971). The fungus shows some
similarity to the conidial state of C. fimbriata Ellis and
Halsted, which causes cankers on P. tremuloides and P.
balsamifera in North America and hybrid poplars in Poland (Gremmen
and de Kam, 1977), but T. populi differs from C. fimbriata
in its conidial states and ITS sequence (Paulin-Mahady et al.,
2002). This is the first report of T. populi outside of
Belgium. The fungus appears to be a weak pathogen and plays a perhaps
minor role in a complex disease syndrome in Hungary.
References
Gremmen J, de Kam M, 1977. Ceratocystis fimbriata, a fungus
associated with poplar canker in Poland. European Journal of Forest
Pathology 7, 44-47.
Paulin-Mahady AE, Harrington TC, McNew D, 2002. Phylogenetic and
taxonomic evaluation of Chalara, Chalaropsis and Thielaviopsis
anamorphs associated with Ceratocystis. Mycologia 94,
62-72.
Veldeman R, 1971. "Chalaropsis sp." a new parasitic fungus
on poplar, the cause of bark lesions. Mededelingem van de Fakultait
Landbouwweteinschappen Rijksuniversiteit (Gent) 36,
1001-1005.
|